The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 14, 1933, Page 4

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4\ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 1938 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- city, town and village, have built up. The druggist is almost like a fireman or policeman. If emergency arises he may be called out in the middle of the night. If s0, he rouses to the call, sleepily, but willingly enough if the une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and)Teason be sufficient. entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN . President and Publisher Frequently his services are as in- dispensible as those of a doctor, some- times they are more so. Working hand in hand together, the members Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marck) 7.20 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota 6. Weekly by mail in state, three years 2.50 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .... ww i Weekly by mail in Canada, per year 3.00 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Facing a United Europe If Europe would only show half the unanimity in reducing excessive armaments as it has shown to date at the economic conference in asking that the United States cancel the for- 1) neeeeeee eens 5.00 00} 0f the slogan ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 of these two professions keep constant guard over America’s health and well- being. Bismarck remembers these things as it entertains the members of a dis- tinguished profession. It is well aware “try the Drugstore first” and all that it implies in the way of business development, but it keeps in mind also, the fact that the 50| druggist is, first and last, a profes- sional man with serious obligations and bearing a specialized relationship to his community. Smaller Gifts to Colleges The day of great gifts to colleges and universities is just about over, if a recent appeal from President Nicholas Murray Butler of Columbia university to Columbia alumni is taken as a criterion. In this appeal President Butler urged support of the university through small gifts. In the past Columbia has been very fortunate in getting many large donations, But now, says President Butler: “The great fortunes and the large accumulations which made these eign debts, we should not have the|benefactions possible are either dis- situation which we now are facing. For years the various nations over- seas have been at each other's throats, first on one thing and then on another. Now we find them snap- ping at us in an effort to intimidate America into granting them relief from their just debts. ‘The meeting at London opens on ‘an inauspicious note but the fight has only begun unless our government calls home our delegates as a result of the obvious breach of the confer- ence agenda. This action is improbable, even though it was suggested in the sen- ate Tuesday by Senator Lewis of Illi- nois and, as he pointed out, is net un- precedented in international diplo- macy. The probable course of this country will be to stick to the original program and refuse to discuss the debt ques- tion. The probability is that our deb- tors will be told this fact just as plain- ly and just as brutally as they launch- ed their campaign for revision. Thus sipated or destroyed. The economic and financial crisis which grips the whole world has made their return quite impossible, certainly for a long time to come, if not forever.” The significance of this change to the privately-endowed institution of higher education could hardly be overestimated. A Needed Reform It is worth noticing that the new Securities bill just put through at Washington will make it unnecessary in the future for a Senate committee to hold an expensive investigation to find out what men were on the “favored lists” of firms like the House of Morgan. The new bill provides that any cor- Poration which sells stock at varying Prices must first notify the Federal Trade Commission, and the names of the “friends” who are permitted to buy below the market will be avail- able to the newspapers. It seems likely that this will cut down on such extensions of privilege the air will be cleared for better or] to a favored few. Deals of that kind do for worse. There is no point to minc- ing matters. If all Europe wants at London is to force the United States into an unfair debt settlement, the conference had better end before it is well started. If foreign nations are sincere in their professed desire to improve world con- ditions they will talk the debts at the proper time and place, not attempt to gang up on America as was evident on Monday and Tuesday. A view which may prove justified by developments is that the foreign nations are making their strongest bluff at the outset. Any government which wishes to do so can repudiate its debt, as not thrive in the light of publicity. The new securities bill provides that light, and makes certain that it will be directed where it is most needed. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, To Congress (Chicago Tribune) The President of the United States on Sunday night called before him Proposal to limit his authority to re- AN OPPORTUNITY FOR BRIGHT YOUNG MEN YOu BET YER Lire I CAN USE You ! —IF You'vVE GoT ANY é IDEAS ABour wuats |* WRONG WITH THIS THING — Hop ws ~ SSS Caen oe oe PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and wriften in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. IN | ~NEW DOES BEER MAKE YOU FAT? pint) yields approximately 120 cal- financial reasons, to go to a differ- ent climate. I have heard goat’s milk is very good. Do you advise By PAUL HARRISON A glass of 8.2% beer (one-half YORK New York, June 14.—Call it retro-|half of one per cent of alcohol. gression if you like, or just a return the leading members of his party in|Fat congress. He told them that their| Water ories if we assume all the alcohol in the beer is oxidized and utilized as fuel. An equal quantity of milk yields approximately 160 calories, and the utilization of all the nutri- tive or fuel material in milk is un- questioned. ha A person who takes a pint of milk or even a glass of milk daily in dition to his or her regular meal: say as a bedtime snack or a mid- afternoon lunch, may expect to gain nearly 2 pounds monthly. If the same person takes a pint of beer or even a glass of beer daily in addition to regular meals, he or she may expect to gain a pound a month. A chemist who made analyses back in 1915 gave these figures for milk and beer: Milk Beer Carbohydrate (sugar) 4.25% 5% Protein (nitrogenous material) 3.25% 0.5 % Mineral matter Alcohol none 3.75% 4.05% none 87.50% 90% In a glass (8 ounces) of beer of France has done, and suffer the con-|¢uce expenditures on so-called veter-|2-2% alcoholic strength there is ap- sequences, as France is doing. But they ‘ot eat their cake and| te t@xpayers—and that means all the have it too. If they want America’s good will they will have to play the People of the country—over a hundred and make balancing of the budget im- game at the economic conference and| Possible without additional taxation. talk debts later. But common diffi- He told them the budget must be bal- anced. He read them the party pledge culties make common causes and it/of a 25 per cent reduction in federal was only natural that they should|expenditures. He demanded that the attempt to inject a question on which | Pledge shall be kept, Every man in all of them are agreed, thereby sub- office he olds knew and knows that Jecting the American delegation to|what the President said is truth. Every united pressure. When the counter ultimatum of|the great assembly in which he sits man in his presence and every man in “no debt discussion” is made the|®S representative of the American na- choice of courses is up to them. Let us hope they are sensible about|the effectuation of the purpose de- it. America has been an international sucker so long that they have justi- fication for attempting to put this _ @eal across, But even the lowest worm turns once in a while and the longest lane knows that the intelligence, the char- buke and the President's demand. ber. has a turning. When Europe finds|liamentary authority in this republic. that out we shall see what the next|The people move is. It is too early to feel hopeless about, even though the start is not impres- sive to those who hope for construc- ‘ive action. Servitors to Mankind Gathering of North Dakota's drug- gists in Bismarck calls to attention our state. ‘The manner in which the drug bus- cause of considerable good-natured | values, witticlsm, but the druggists them- selves have never forgotten their real mission. This is to serve the public in a man- do; to sell reliable remedies for com- makes good ice cream sodas may be in filling a prescription, but the latter is vastly more important in his judg- ment. First of all, there is the matter of Professional pride and a desire to ful- fill the major purpose of the business. Again, there is the tradition of serv- ice which years of faithful work, et * capitol. fully conscious of their condition and of their power and they will not tol- erate the callous disregard of the na- the outcome of this world gathering, |tion’s vital need, the flagrant breach of faith and duty, the suicidal irre- sponsibility which are reappearing in congress to threaten the reviving hope of the nation. It is not so soon for- gotten that the preceding congress by its cowardly yielding to the clamor of blatant and reckless minorities, by its demagogy and ruthless disregard of the essentials of imperative public the splendid services which these | policy, brought the satis to ee es entlemen render to the citize of chaos and ruin. e_ American . Bs oe people will not submit to his betrayal. It is reported that congressmen are more fearful of the political conse- iness has expanded to include the sale|quences of voting against the veteran of many things foreign to the old- /obby's mene as of the just wrath foned of the President. ie a correct their perspective and their If the congress has not lost all touch with reality it will realize forthwith that it cannot play the game of self-seeking groups however loudly they batter on the doors of the The welfare of the nation, ner which no other profession can|the credit of the government, the re- storation of Hop! Ureiheod. of ihe assist homes, of the reviving energies of a ig aap the physician | hundred and thirty million Americans in treating the sick. That a druggist |are at stake and will not be sacrificed to the insolence of blind and self- as important to him financially as|Seeking minorities or to the folly of parasite politics. The vitality of the that he use only the best materials | vation is being drained to exhaustion They had bette: by the exactions of public extrava. gance. The burden of public debt and destroying taxation can no longer be borne. The President's demand is th demand of the nation. obeyed, ‘There were 104,000 moter buses onaraling. in the United States durin: and seventy million dollars this year | “lorie. republic knows that his duty lies in clared by the President. Every man in congress who is fit to be there acter, and the will of the American people are behind the President's re- Congress should wake up to this. It is ctitical in the fate of every mem- It is critical in the fate of par- of the United States are It must be Jans and other payments would cost |Proximately one-fourth of an ounce of alcohol. This quantity of alcohol, if oxidized in the body, yields 58 In the same quantity of milk there is approximately one- third of an ounce of fat, and this yields more than 90 calories. Weight for weight fat contains more heat or energy units, is a better fuel, than alcohol. A gram of alcohol yields 7.2 calories; a gram of fat his presence who is fit for the mien Per OBE Perhaps individuals vary in their capacity to oxidize and use as en- ergy or fuel the alcohol in beer or other alcoholic beverage. I don’t know, but I believe a pint of beer a tion who is fit to be a legislator of the | @2Y is as much as any ordinary per. son can consume without exceeding his capacity to use the alcohol as food, for energy or for heat. One is obvious to common sense—when any one takes enough alcohol to give an alcoholic odor on the breath he has taken more than he can profit- and not in the popular parlance. Intoxication with alcohol, in a drink or two of beer, wine or liquor, invariably retards the reaction time. It makes the intoxicated individual, say, two fifths of a second slower in his reaction to any stimulus, warning or signal. This fact explains a great many accidents which might be avoided by prompt reaction to the warning or signal of danger. Bedtime is the best time to have your bottle of beer if you like beer better than milk, and rye bread and cheese or pretzels or a sandwich go 0.70% 0.20% | ( thing is as certain scientifically as it ably utilize. As soon as the limit of the individual’s capacity to metabol- ize the alcohol is exceeded, the in- dividual is intoxicated. Remember, we are speaking in scientific terms, me to drink it? Please tell me about goat’s milk. (Miss M. C.) Answer—Why go to another cli- mate? So far as the records show your recovery is as sure here at ome as it is in any other climate— if you (1) have a good doctor and (2) always follow his advice and nobody’s else. Goat’s milk is fine if you can afford it or better, keep a goat, but I should not advise you to pay more for goat’s milk than you ave td pay for cow’s milk. Goats are almost immune to tuberculosis. Hence goat’s milk is less likely to contain tubercle bacilli than is cow’s milk. Any family with a yard or roadside where a tethered animal may graze, is lucky to have a goat, for the two or three quarts of milk she gives daily. Whitfield’s Ringworm Ointment Will you kindly print again the pace for the salve for foot itch... Answer—Twenty-five grains ben- zoic acid, 15 grains salicylic acid, 2 drams soft petrolatum, and enough cocoanut oil to make one ounce of ointment. Flat Feet and Varicose Veins Would walking about 15 miles a day tend to give a person flat feet or enlarged veins? I am 29, in good health, and I like to do a lot of walking. (B. J. W.) Answer—On the contrary it tends to prevent or cure both conditions. Especially if you go barefoot or wear the right shoes. Send stamped en- velope bearing your address and ask for instructions for care of the feet and selection of footwear. aw the man in the | _[M] pleture? fF lt | 24Set of musical who preside over song. and etry. very well with the beer, they tell me. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Goat's Milk - I have tbe., and am unable, for r e Naw THE LEADING, F .._ AMERICAN COTTON STONEWALL’ JACKSON'S PRODUCING STATI s REALNAME 2 addi 88 Nine goddesses to the good old days. But the fact is that time continues spinning rapidly in reverse so far as amusement-seek- ers are concertied. The Players’ Club is staging a serious revival of “Uncle Tom's Cabin.” The bridge fans are toying with the idea of going back to a variation of whist. Dice in par- cheesi cups are clattering all over town. Debs are getting measured for bicycles. And dignified men are go- ing to sporting goods houses for pairs of adult roller skates. Mr. Ben Cannon, ancient cabby who haunts the lower reaches of Central Park, reports that his barouche hasn’t been so busy in years. Saucy bonnets and leg-o'-mutton-ish sleeves are more than ever in evidence on comely strol- lers. There are kaleidoscopes in Schwartz's window on Fifth Avenue. Some people are staying in nights to look at the modern equivalent of the old family album—home movies. The pingponists are still ponging and pinging, and backgammon hasn't died out by any means. Also, folks are now playing charades. hs All this probably has some essential significance which should be called to the attention of Mr. Roosevelt, who, incidentally, plays an old card game called “Miss Milligan.” But it doesn’t mean that people are spending less money for entertainment, or that they're necessarily amusing themselves at home. Go to any night club these evenings and you're likely to find peo- ple spinning tops and roller skating. ee % PARCHEESI BOOMING Parcheesi (and you do spell it with DICTATOR HORIZONTAL ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE TART TE JOIRIE] IAINICIE MK! BVRCANADA! 3 IDIEVITISIE 53 Guided. ‘34 Garden tool, 535 Oceans, 5 Starcahapea lower. 50 Rough exterior |. VERTICAL Tee AType of spool. 51 Loose. oT; of poetry. 34 Very warm. 3 Almond. 56 South ‘Carol 4 Exists. 5 Hodgepodge. 6To crush. a double “e”) is staging a phenomenal |ful about our future, but I certainly | now tell the treasury how to collect jcome-back. There is actually @ Par- cheesi Association of America, with a paying membership, which exists for the sole purpose of settling squabbles about the rules. About 20 people a day write in to Mrs, Melvin Fuller, the president. Most of the questions, she says, deal with perhaps dozen moot .|points, but sometimes an entrely new problem comes up, and is submitted to the committee on rules. This, you understand, is not the parcheesi which was introduced in this country in 1964; nor is it the “parchis” that the Hindus played centuries ago. This is “club par- cheesi,” for adults, and has a scor- ing system and a set of bonuses, pen- alties and doubles which make it ex- citing for gambling. There also “is @ condition of vulnerability, just as in bridge. For instance, when you have one of your four men “home” the other three become particplarly choice prey huss bi ih FAMOUS ADDICTS You'd be surprised, Mrs. Fuller says, at the list of prominent folk who are parcheesi addicts. By the way, this was the only game that Thomas Edi- son enjoyed, and it was favored by Calvin Coolidge. Ring Lardner is a fan, and Neysa McMein, the artist. Herbert Bayard Swope likes the great open spaces of a parcheesi board. So do the Wanamakers, Helen Whitney Bourne and dozens of other socialites. U. S. Attorney George Medalie con- siders it a highly scientific game. It’s also played at the Union Club, where @ controversy over @ certain move re- cently resulted in a blue-print of the situation being made and submitted to the association. Lots of movie people are on the rolls—Clara Bow, Madge Evans, George Raft, Wynne Gibson, even Jackie Cooper, who plays the adult version with relish. Clifton Webb, the dancer, has even elaborated on the “club percheesi” rules, adding an exciting new provision by which you're permitted to chase an opponent’s man all the way home—and in so doing may lose your shirt. A man or a woman in Hollywood is only as good as his latest picture— Barbara Stanwyck, film actress. ee % It is high time to return to sound legal doctrine and re-declare the prin- (ciple of law that courts are not bound to swallow legislative definitions when they are unreasonable and untrue.— Judge Milton J. Helmick, of New ‘Mexico, in overruling state law limit- ing non-intoxicating liquors to one- * * % I don’t want to be other than hope- think that as a great power culminated in the Nineteenth Cen- tury—Dean Inge, London's “Gloomy Dean.” ee *% I should no more call reflation ‘which is taking place from abnormal- ly low price levels inflation than should call a man a mountainee> when he is coming up from the cellar. —Sir Joseph Stamp, director of the Bank of England, in address at Chi-~ cago. ae % an income tax ae Mr. Morgan. * * Quite often a bridge player gets the most kick out of the game when playing opposite his own wife. ee 4% I] Kentucky judge rules that a gol) Player “is not legally able to con- trol either the direction or the desti- Ration of @ ball driven by him’ Well, this judge doesn’t beat about the bush, even if a lot of golfers do. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) Africa is the only peaceful, quiet continent, without tyrants, without dictators, without danger of revolu- tion or war.—Guglielmo Ferrero, his- torian, OH | Barbs ! nl e News that Oregon fishermen are wearing tin boots to protect them- selves against rattlesnake bites prob- ably will come as a big surprise to many fishermen who have always thought that a quart of bourbon offer- ed the best protection. ee *% Eighty-two-year-old Kentucky woman, after visit to White House, declares her only remain- ing aim now is to go to heaven. Republicans probably will insist she’s on the wrong road. ee % Army cadets defeated Harvard students in higher mathematics con- test.. Maybe the War Department can Made $899,000 In Morgan Deal George Whitney, partner of J. P. Morgan, made a profit of $899,000 in one deal on stocks of a company in which he was a director. Whitney is shown here as he testified in the Senate in- quiry. MAKEBELIEV Copyright, 1930, by Fath Beldein Mary Lou Thurston, beautiful orphan, séeks a position in the home of wealthy Mrs. Margaret Lorrimer, when the latter’s son, Travers, a shell-shocked _war veteran, enters. At sight of Mary he becomes wildly excited, lary Lou for Delit Harford, whom he claims he ee tied in England, but of whom no record can be found. Mrs. Lor- timer persuades Mary Lou to assume the role of Delight to help Travers regain his health. Travers is told that, as Delight was so young at the time of her marriage and had since thought him dead, they must start all over again. In her first encounter with Travers, Mary Lou plays her part perfectly. Travers takes new interest in life. CHAPTER XX. Delight, called him. He asked me why I didn’t?” “I see—you've worked wonders already,” Mrs. Lorrimer told her again. : “Not really. It’s the novelty of the situation,” explained Mary Lou earnestly, “that makes him so e: to handle. And he is making it easy for me, in more ways than one. If only . . . if only,” she said, “we can keep it up and get him more and more back to nor- mal! I would have accepted his offer to teach me to ride even if I hated the thought, which I didn’t.” Presently a saleswoman and an assistant arrived from New York and Mary Lou’s room took on the pajamas had been selected and the clever little negligee coats that went with them, Mrs. Lorrimer sent a tea tray to the saleswoman and her assistant, up in Mary Lou's sitting room, and ordered the car for the late afternoon train. Then she and Mary Lou went down to the lib: , Mary Lou wearing one of the new frocks, the sheer matching stock- ings and the completely satisfac- tory shoes, while the shop people repacked what little there was left, drank their tea and raved almost incoherently about Mrs, Lorrimer and her—was it niece? “Ask Mr. Travers if he will join ” Mrs.. Lorrimer told Peter, t the great book-lined room which contrived to be bookly without gloom and comfortable and gay without dis- PERS | “A Mother’s Hope” | He would and did. Refreshed from sleep, amazed, a little ashamed of himself, and suddenly quite hungry, he arrived in the library and was offered tea and toast and ordered to admire Mary Lou’s gown. “She's so easy to fit,” said his mother, “that it was like dressing a doll!” ga denly felt a catch at her heart. If —if he fell in love with Mary Lou, transferred his affections? But o: course he would not realise the transference. Still—he’d have to know some day, And then? And if Mary Lou—in her turn...? Travers’ mother felt that it was semblance of a shop gone mad. |9i There was plenty to choose from and Mrs. Lareiinee, selected, era ually, three plain charmi l= time dresses, suitable tor” early Winter wear in the country, a suit for town, and all the accessories of lingerie, shoes and gloves. She selected also several afternoon and dinner dresses and evening frocks, admirably suited to Mary Lou’s type, delightful in cut and coloring. { Means to an End | “But,” cried Mary Lou, pirouet- ting in the prettiest evening frock of all, a t, scant, high-waisted bodice of lear pale green and a skirt formed of many petals of tulle, with the long li of the mode, entirely ing and be- coming “‘but—these are far too many “T don’t think so,” Mrs. Lorri- living somewhere, the wife, per- haps, of the ee who papas! watchi eagerness: pat the question from her, the pro Fie se eae and seeks hastily of anything, everythi: distract her troubled thoughts, But the problem was not to be set aside as easily as that, Shortly before Christmas Dr. Mathews, dropping in at tea hour, watched from the windows of the library the slight flurry of snow which came suddenly from an ap- meer replied critically, “but they|Mary Lou ‘and will do for now, at any event. I’m and Mary Lou smiled back, under- standing. “But you'll have plenty of use for them. We'll get some young peo} He over, a little Jeter. lenny and her ‘gang,’ Travers hasn’t been Sneious Tor company, you know; has avoided it. But with you here, he’ll soon see that he can’t coop you up alone for long. It wouldn't be fai: to you, and it will be good for him to see people,” she led, lower. Mary Lou nodded again. She could see Mrs. Lorrimer’s point. With herself as an excuse, Mrs. Lorrimer would try to win back her fon, fo the sie #4 take a ung, yy, socie ain. ould be the best ing t could hay to ore NSPS flagire but delectable Ee peers exam fair er to pl ly every ro e’s man: to him Ae, and to Ded carly Ry He's gine, to squash. Yes, he’s much better. Sleeps well, and his appelite has improved enormously, le still has those—well, spells o: brooding. He’s quiet then, ab- stracted, living over Sings, She palls him out somehow. They read gether, French, English and a little German. “Neither of them is an accom- ished German student. I think started that to try and get him FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: 510 BC.- Roman lic established 509'B.C First Ro tells second Rome pc ne at tp éeve TIME! tats Y Sy FAITH BALDWIN “Dittribated by King Features Syndicate, Inc. to a more rational memory of— war, ji ee all the rest, told me that if he Cr ine Cy C e she thought it would for she felt he'd gotten to inking too much about what he had suffered, and did not realize that there were men on the other them. And she’s reconciled him to Jenny and her crowd. come over now and ig ae “What have tol a “Just a Travers knew during the war ey that I’ve asked her to live with us, as my companion, as she is now alone in the world.” “Yen poked x but es, & romance, says nothi about it. Jenny is hard roe so she thinks—but she is discreet.” “And if,” Mathews asked slowly, “4f Jenny should be right, and out of this it of ours ro- .’ Margaret made a little belpices apernre, “I don’t know! I —I'd it, of course. For own sake as well as for Travers’. But—until we know for cer- tain...2” Mathews started to answer, but at that moment Travers and yr. Lou came in, booted and i, with a hint of Winter winds about them, Lorrimer’s sallow face glow- ing Mary Lou's like nothing so much as a rose. “We're starved, aren’t we, Lorry? I hope there’s lots of tea! No, I'd rather have milk if Peter doesn’t mind,” said Mary ju, ed ing her mind, “and so would you ry. You need to get some fat on that rack of bones,” she assured him. “Dr. Math don’t suppose you spprove if a stuffing between reals} ° | Always on the Go | “I seem to be ing an im- preerion. on this nite or toast,” e doctor told her. They were old friends by now. “And in your case, Delight, I certainly do ap- prove, tee you ue 2 EP. ne ene or six girls in and ‘his household is so fashion- able it dines late. But what about your a “What about it?” asked Mary Lon, Jeughing, aan the same weight year roun st. matey Wet Fed = ing to let next Spring. uA ee And I've my daily eg Rea io Jet more besides. 20 an time,” she confessed eee she There was @ scratch at the libs doo! id i Morey, jr and an inquiring “Oh, please, may he come in?” lary Lou bi ged, “He's been about waiting out- a huge sigh of relief, his red tongue flickering across her hand and his entire body one welcoming waggle. Mary Lou tickled his pointed ears and gave him a for- idden lump of sugar. Mathews raised an eyebrow at M ‘et_Lorrimer, rememberin, the long years when dogdom had been banished from this house. Te Be Continued Tomorrow), ee eee se eee

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